The Story of the Amitabha Stupa, Sedona Arizona 1 | Page 27

Tree of Life Auspicious coincidence had a role to play, bringing together just the right people for the myriad tasks needed to give rise to the Amitabha Stupa. Seemingly by chance in Santa Fe, New Mexico, the stupa’s project coordinators met two Tibetan brothers, one a spiritual teacher and artist, the other an accomplished wood carver, who agreed to come to Sedona to carve and paint the Stupa’s tree of life or sok-shing. They arrived within days at the exact phase of construction that required their artistic mastery. The sok-shing is a tapered, 4-sided cedar column that is the central channel and life force of the stupa. The brothers carved a stupa at the top of the sok-shing and a thunderbolt, or dorje, at the bottom. The tree of life symbolizes the transcendent knowledge of phenomena realized by an awakened being.